1,022 research outputs found

    The Quest for Identity: A Conversation with John O\u27Leary

    Get PDF
    This article describes a discussion that the author had with John O\u27Leary, an Irish poet. It discusses the nature of what it means to be Irish and Irish-American and talks about how many modern people of Irish descent are focusing more on the ancient Irish traditions rather than the stereotypical Irish-American images of famine victims and green beer

    Trials and Appeals (Book Review)

    Get PDF

    How to Prove a Prima Facie Case (3d ed.)(Book Review)

    Get PDF

    New York Evidence (Book Review)

    Get PDF

    Trials and Appeals (Book Review)

    Get PDF

    New York Evidence (Book Review)

    Get PDF

    Applicability of an Activity Based Cost System in Government Service Organizations

    Get PDF
    This research focused on the applicability of Activity-Based Cost (ABC) systems within government service organizations. ABC implementation efforts within other government organizations were first examined to determine what information short caused managers to consider ABC implementation. Next, archival analysis was conducted within the case study organization to determine if the same accounting information shortfalls existed. An ABC system was then implemented within the case study organization. ABC information was compared with information provided by the case study organization\u27s fund accounting system. The case study organization\u27s fund accounting system traced congressional appropriations to categories of expenditures for FY93. The fund accounting system reported aggregate category costs of the organization and department costs by category of expense. However, the organization\u27s fund accounting system was not able to provide information to link expenditures across expense categories to business processes with the organization. Conversely, the ABC system reported activity costs, process costs, and product costs. The research concluded that ABC offers government service organizations non-budgetary information which may be used to target opportunities for process improvement or cost reduction

    Recent Journalism Awards Won by Old, New, and Hybrid Media

    Get PDF
    This compares the quality of the old media to that of the new media by determining how often each type of media source wins major journalism awards. It divides media sources into three categories: old, new and hybrid. New media is limited to publications that were started purely as online news publications. Old media is classified in the traditional sense to include such newspapers as the New York Times. Hybrid media combines elements of both new and old media. Our research compares the number of Pulitzer Prizes and other major journalism awards won by these three types of media sources since 2005 (or the dates these awards first opened to non-traditional types of media). The results demonstrate that traditional media still wins the vast majority of journalism awards (225 of 307 awards (73%), including 24 of 37 Pulitzer Prizes), while the new media won only 36 of 307 awards, and only 4 Pulitzer Prizes). The results are especially striking for awards for investigatory journalism (traditional media won 65 of 86 awards - 76%) and for local journalism (traditional media won 23 of 32 awards - 77%). This is evidence that the reporting by the traditional media is often of a significantly higher quality than that of the new or hybrid media. This quality difference has implications for Antitrust analysis and for many other policy issues. This document serves as the appendix to an article: Thomas J. Horton & Robert H. Lande, Should the Internet Exempt the Media Sector from the Antitrust Laws? 65 Florida Law Review 1521 (2013), available at: http://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/all_fac/1747

    Recent Journalism Awards Won by Old, New, and Hybrid Media

    Get PDF
    This compares the quality of the old media to that of the new media by determining how often each type of media source wins major journalism awards. It divides media sources into three categories: old, new and hybrid. New media is limited to publications that were started purely as online news publications. Old media is classified in the traditional sense to include such newspapers as the New York Times. Hybrid media combines elements of both new and old media. Our research compares the number of Pulitzer Prizes and other major journalism awards won by these three types of media sources since 2005 (or the dates these awards first opened to non-traditional types of media). The results demonstrate that traditional media still wins the vast majority of journalism awards (225 of 307 awards (73%), including 24 of 37 Pulitzer Prizes), while the new media won only 36 of 307 awards, and only 4 Pulitzer Prizes). The results are especially striking for awards for investigatory journalism (traditional media won 65 of 86 awards - 76%) and for local journalism (traditional media won 23 of 32 awards - 77%). This is evidence that the reporting by the traditional media is often of a significantly higher quality than that of the new or hybrid media. This quality difference has implications for Antitrust analysis and for many other policy issues. This document serves as the appendix to an article: Thomas J. Horton & Robert H. Lande, Should the Internet Exempt the Media Sector from the Antitrust Laws? 65 Florida Law Review 1521 (2013), available at: http://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/all_fac/1747

    Midlatitude Mesoscale Convective Complex precipitation cycles and structures

    Get PDF
    Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Meteorology and Physical Oceanography, 1983.Microfiche copy available in Archives and Science.Bibliography: p. 107-108.by Robert Patrick Callahan.M.S
    corecore